iijiifllfo supply to the Empire rang- . EAGE FOUR gs CIIARLCTTETCWII GUARDIAN Unison-w. Cheater s. ism", 11.2. Yko-Iralldnnt, ma. sumo, 2.; r Bocrelary-Lhuh-Onl. on. nun-us. o.|.o. ' ‘ Editor and Managing Iilraetor—-J.B. Barnett. I.I.l. v -~_- Associate Editors-Frank Walker and 0.1. Oanh. Morals.‘ Dts-ly (founded 1H1) “.00 pa: year (In advaaan) dallvqod. ‘Agni year (In advance) laallad In (laaada and Ilnilad ltatna. rnuasnar, war s, 1m. g- A WELCOME GUEST, _-, Our citizens generally will extend " "fborlilal welcome to Brigadier Gen- "Iral Alex. Ross, C.M.G., D.S.O., 15.0., " Dbrfilnion President of the Canadian who will be the guest of hon- .. Durant-the annual reunion of the -» provincial branches of the Canad- * Ianiieglon this evening. A Barrister by profession, General Ross is a Budge of the District Court at York- bqryfiaskatchewan. At the outbreak “War he raised the Regina draft o! the llth Battalion, and went overseas as a Major in the 28th Northwest Battalion mobilized at [Winnipeg on Nov. 1, i914. He served pwItJiZlgreat distinction at the Front and-at the close of the War was in command, as Brigadier General‘, of the advance guard of the 2nd Can- pdian Division at 1-lavre, near Mons. l It is the aim of General Ross, as hewly elected head of the Canadian Legion, to strengthen the organiza- tion in its worthwhile efforts to as- sist needy veterans and promote the spirit of Empire service and co- pperation. To this task he is de- yotirzg himself with the some energy Indfilbility which marked his milit- jry career, and the leadership he is howing promises to be of far reach- ‘ ‘ benefit, not only to the Legion, but to all Canada. j GLASGOW’S APPEAL "IThe Ottawa Conference with its Bmpire Trade Agreements has brought the word “Empire" nearer gum ever before to the hearts an-i minds of the British race." This is the keynote of an appeal which the manufacturers of Glas- gow» and the West of Scotland are making in a publication entitled "True Reciprocity," issued by the filasgow Chamber of Commerce and ‘fliai Clyde Navigation 'I'rust, in Ewhich is listed a. truly imposing ‘array of Scottish industries which ire seeking to promote and estab- lish wider reciprocal Empire trade. it‘ is pointed out that during the last few ycars imports of Dominion products to the Clyde have been greatly increased-in some cases more than treblcd. There is room for. a. still wider expansion of im- ports from the Dominions. but it bituggested that this should be accompanied by a development 0f airport trade, as ships bringing present imports often sail out in ballast or with small cargoes. The list of manufactures which Glasgow and West Scotland is pre- ‘oazal-l- the way from ice-breakers and ocean liners to bagpipw, hag- gis and, oatcakes. Q1 ROAD SAFETY CODE f‘ With traffic along the highways now in full swing, it is t-mely to auggest that care is necessary on thqpart of motorists to avoid mrls- haps’ to themselves and others. Be- low are given the important provi- Iions of an official Highway Code asAsummarized by the Automobile ‘Animation of Great Britain, which are-equally applicable to driving 111 phis Pmvince: Carefully regulate your speed at all times to suit the circumstances and weather conditions. '33; ready and: ttble w pull up {well within the distance which is clear to you. I. when stopping, slowing down, or dhangiilg direction, give the proper aignal clearly and in good time. ' Keep a sharp look out for traffic highs and warning notices. i‘ Never overtake unless You M? certain it is safe to do so. (The, ‘brow of a steep hill, or a hump bail-i jod bridge, conceals on-oominl; traffic just as effectively as a sharp bend.) Do not overtake at cross roads or| road junctions. I Do not cul. in. When another driver wishes l0 bvertakc, keep wcll to your 0W0 aide and—lf the road is clear~siK- [ml him on. Never accelerate at such a mom-lent. Go slow ln narrow country lanes- Biiflid corners. hidden drivers. cat- Ig or other obstruction may at any moment offer unexpected dangers. When approaching cross roads a sharp look out and drive aautiously. "I! driving a motor coach or other Ydlicle in convoy, do not drive too close to the preceding vehicle. "Do not. leave your vehicle stat- in such a. position as to ob- "an-tier. the view of other drivers. vehicles should not be left in elm proximity to sharp b81108 0i‘ 106d junctions. At night time do not leave your vehicle standing with its headllShl-fi fa}; (side lights are sufficient) and .avold leaving the vehicle facing k wrong way. Do not attempt to turn your ve- hicle round in the mad unless you osnseethattliemadisolecd-for a good distance in both directions. Remember that the horn should onlybeusedasawamingofyour approach. It should not be used as a throat. Never take it. for granted that your warning has been heard. When ' orovertaklng pedes- trians, cyclists or animals, give them plenty of room. Take special care not to endanger children. They are so liable to do the unexpected. Slow down or slop when request- ed or sigrwdled to do so, by those in charge of horses or otlher animals. Keep on guard against the errors of others. There is always the risk that they may do the wrong thing. EDITORIAL NOTES July Fourthgnot the day it used to be. Americans previously were reput- edto come to Canada. for a drink-i now it may be for a change of; drink. “Our national credit was never higher," declares the speech from the Throne. How many countries in the world can make such a justi- fiable boast today. Parliament having prorogued the different ministers will now have an opportunity of devoting at- tention to executive duties and the personal oversight of their depart- menls. One of the shows for tour- ists is our caged prisoners at St. Avardkl. Visitors are more than surprised at this modern edition of the stocks in the market place where offenders were held up to public contumely. The unthinking people who make so much of Communistlc trouble- makers should pause and think of the fate of anti-Socialists in Ger- many and elsewhere. With the sac- rifice of democracy comes unbrid- led savagely, deprivation of free- dom. and worship of the god Brutal Force. We are to be favoured with s. spe- cial excursion from the Mainland from July l3 to l6. The CNR. are advertising in Mainland papers a specially cheap excursion from ‘ll points in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick to all points in P.E.I., good from Friday, 13 to Monday l6. This is an opportunity which Is- landers at home should bring to the notice of their friends on the Mainland. It was Senator Hughes. (not Mr. A. E. McLean,) who moved in ahe Banking Commerce committee 0f amended, so that the Banks could make loans to farmers to enable them to buy fertilizer on the same terms and conditions as they made loans to fanners to enable them to buy seed grain and binder twine. The Amendment was accepted and wamily commended by the R181"- Hon. Mr. Melghen. leader of the Senate. Although Uncle Sam even goes into debt on a big scale it cannot be held against him that he is any- thing but penurious when it comes to small economies. Because of the need of curtailing expenditures, the fiat has gone forth that in future no more ice water shall be pro- vlded judges in the court, and not more than one towel per week. 1n defence of the ad-ministrfltlfm I cynic suggests there may have been too mulch washing of dirty linen in courts recently. Whatever may b6 "18 10811 P181191 OI the City Council regarding m concessions. few will find it in their hearts to criticize them adversely if they decide to relieve the Forum of 75 ,\r cent of the asoessmnt. In moat other cities moans of outdoor entertainment and amusement are provided at the expensa of the City Council, and the Forum is a substitutc for ourdoor recreation provided by a number of philan- thropic and emu-prising citizens. Sticking to the letter of tlha law ,the City Council may‘ very well re- fuse to grunt any concemions, but would that be doing the right thing by the citizens as a whole? According to the Rt. Hon. Neville Chamberlain, British Chancellor of the Exchequer, the USA. always do things on a big scale, even in rumilhi; 1m» debt. Evidently the Washington government is satisfied to maintain that reputation regard- lng unbalanced budgets for it rec- ords a deficit of practically four million dollars at the end of Presi- ‘question of armaments the Senate that the Bank Act be‘ Notes By The Way Science's first recorded discovery of gold that has fallen from the airy to the earth was reported by Dean Gillespie of Denver. This unique discovery has been reported to the American Association for the adva- t of Science. A stony meteorite found near Mel- rose. New Mexico, was analyzed. Minute amounts of gold were de- tccted. Just to be sure, this unusual result was checked by an American smelting and Refining company assay. There will. however, be no gold rush to the shooting stars, be- cause the quantities of gold are en- tirely impracticable for commercial recovery. Much of the eye strain revealed by medical examination of school children is attributed to the habit 0f heading in bed. a medical auth- ority staics. It has been found that reading in bed for longer than half an hour leads to conjunctivitis and in some cases to severe eye-strain, The remedy lies in restricted read- 1118 to half an hour at a time, with the light falling over the left shoul- der. Bathing the eyes afterwards, before settling down to sleep, with a. medicated eye lotion is also sug- gested as a preventive of strain and possible conjunctivitis. Great Britain's new stand on the seems t0 have awakened Japan to a reap. zation that it is possible to exhaust British patience. Japan u-ill, ac- cordingly. take a more active part in the naval conference. Presum- ably this means she will confer in- stead of issuing demands and refus- 1118 to discuss alternatives. France with “security" and quotas. Ger. many with her moratorium. the United States with her persistent stalling on war debts and exchange stabilization, and Japan with her claim for a larger naval ratio, have compelled Great Britain to modify her lenient attitude and all these countries are beginning to realize they have gone too far. London Daily Telegraph ((10:15,); This Black Plague is as much an infection from abroad as the Red. Moreover, the virus of the one is almost indistinguishable from that 0f the other. and the resultant dis- ease runs for a time a similar course which is equally fatal to liberty. Nothing is more true than that, Fascism actually begets the Cam- munlsm which it is ostensibly design 0d to overthrow. A great deal of criticism is hurl- ed at the President of the United States because he keeps experimcntq ing. But the entire world is takq lng note of this courage of his, and ls learning from him. We have liv- ed so fast and have advanced so rapidly the past quarter of a cen- tury that old ideas and methods have begun to creak. like an old wagon. A. railroad train rolled into Chicago the other clay after making the run from Denver in less than 12 hours-or at an average of over 7B miles hour! 1t beat the best record in time by one half. And no.‘ long ago an airplane made the trip’ from coast to coas. in the United States in about the slime time. A great newspaper publisher stated the other day that the great Chi- cago "Century of Progress“ Fair was‘ merely indicative of what the next century is going to be, no‘. merely What the last century has achieved. And all because of experiments! Laws - and even constitutions— should fit the times. So should ideas. London Daily Express (Ind): This is the twilight of Hitler. The .Nazi Government have no money. Germany has no credit abroad. No export surplus. ct enough food- stuffs at home. ermany is re- quired to buy from foreign count- ries, and has nothing to buy with, The French, watching grimly from beyond the Rhine, expect a milit- ary dictatorship to supersede the. Nazis. The French are no bad jud-I ges of a political situation. A Suburban woman was still ciarl‘ in a dressing gown when she heard the door bell ring, and saw the Chinese laundry man standing by the door. Calling to her maid shc said: “Theres a Chinaman at the door. You go, Ella." This alas too much for the celestial, who shout- ed back: "you g0 ‘ella. yourself," and departed in high dudgeon THI‘. a §__ Bolllf/Balsml-D. GETTING BID 0F HEAT FROM THE BODY ' It is interesting to see how manu- facturers of children's garments are now supplying a. summer garment for youngsters which allows the up- per part of the body, legs, and arms to be free and exposed to the air and the sun. An editorial in the Journal of the American Medical Association re- minds us that although the legs and arms are considered as supplying only a small part of the surface of the body, as a matter of fact it has been calculated the arms, hands, legs and feet, really take up two- thirds of the body surface. Now this is important both in hot weather and cold weather also, bo- cause heat must be lost in the hot weather and saved or conserved dur- ing the cold weather. Further it is known that the arms and legs, sticking out into the air away from the body, are capable of losing more heat for the amount of their surface measurement than the main part of the body or trunk. The movement of blood toward or away from the surface of the body has been measured by taking the temperature of the skin. It was observed that an increase in the surrounding temperature caused an increase in the temper- ature of the skin; the least change occurring on the skin of the fore- head and trunk, and the greatest in the hands and feet, especially the toes and the big toe in particular. It would seem that in order to keep the temperature of the body at the proper point much blood must be moved to and from the extremi- ties-hands and feet. This accounts. in part, for the swelling of the hands and feet in the warm wea- ther and the shrinkage during the cold weather. The editorial concludes with this warning: “As body heat must be conserv- ed or maintained in cold weather, and heat lost in warm weather, one may well view with some apprehen- sion or uneasiness the present habits of dress which encourage the leaving off of stockings from the costume. especially among little children whose temperature equilibrium is none too secure at best." The thought then is that leaving of‘! shoes and stockings in the warm weather is wise as it helps the body lose heat. but leaving off stockings in cold weather, to “harden" the youngster, may be very unwise. Ghost Ships Of The Arctic (Winnipeg Free Press) The thoughls of shipping men at Seattle have turned with their fur flects to the Arctic, and they do not hide the belief that the Hud- son's Bay Company's lost steam- ship, the Baychimo, has become a phantom of the Arctic. Nearly four years ago the ice locked her and forced the crew to leave her, but each year since then she has. re- appeared somewhere either in Be- ring Strait or the Arctic Sea, and been scan again. Tile Baychimo loomed up as in the wake of her mirage, last sum- mer, to the amazement oi’ the crew of a United States coastguard cut- ter, but the shoals and fioes made approach impossible. She had drifted when seen a few weeks 1a- ter by the skipper of the schooner C. S. Holmes. and than, unmanned. with prow edect. she was carried away by a current that took her again into the pack. Where the Baychimo is held fo- day, or whether her hull still rises hopefully above water level or rests on ice floor, nobody knows, but her reappearance, as she again sails on a currents usual five-knot way, will not surprise the shipping world. Other ships have disappeared in the Arctic, but have any of them, or many of them, escaped being broken up? Strange tales have been told of ghostly vessels locked fa: within the Polar Sea, but the tales gained faint credence, Yet the Baychimo sailed: once more after she had been thought. w be sunk. Can there be other ships still sur- viving though it is long since they had to be deserted and they disap- A new theory that the viciims of‘. the Black Hole of Crllcutla £11351‘ from heat stroke and not of asphy- ig: was advanced by Professor J.l P610“. Professor of Physlologyl at Cambridge. in a lccturl- bciorc the Research Defense Sosicty in London. “History has always as-' sumed that they died of asphyxia.‘ Modern views of ventilation all point in a different dimction, name- ly. that they died of heat stroke. If there is no through current and the amount of heat produced by Persons in a room is greater thani the walls of the room can carry‘ away, the temperature of the ins} habitants must rise, and in the ex-. treme case fatally." I The Contemporary luvlcw (Ion-i don): (Japan's Budget for 1034-35 W!!! flllproved by the Cabinet on, December 2nd». Though the total, 0f 2-111-000-000 yen. m which have yet to be added the supplementary charges represents only about one- quarter of the British Budge. at par, it oonstlttues a record for Japan, there is__onc “raft about it of dent Roosevelt's first year. The‘ government spent $7,105,050,084.95! against an inconze of 851115.554.- 048.53 and borrowed $4,514.468,B54.33' to covrr the difference and lcovei a sizeable margin to carry into the_ MW V081‘. The borrowings ran the nation's public dr-bt to an all-time peak of I27,053,14i.48, against which the treasury hari a cash rc- mainder on hand 0f $2,581,992.240 l6, a sum S1,719,'ll'l,0l9.55 greater than that with which the year began. peared? Many ships have gone in- to the Arctic and have not retum- ed. It is recalled how, in one sweep of the ice, 30 whaling ships disap- pcarcd. Of their crews, most took the chalice of retreating to safety by taking the long, rough road ov- or the ice, but 70 men refused to desert the whale boats, What hap- pened to those men and what be- came of their boats? Eskimos carried by the ice pack far north into unchartered wastes have come back to find their sto- rlcs of silent ships unbelieved. Yet they are convinced they had seen ships, gleaming white rigged afar off, hard and fast in the ice. Other visions of ships have been thought only to be dcceits of mirage. but mlrages are understood to reflect objects. But what ships in com- m d ave been in the extraordinary significance: 037,000,- 000 yen are devoted to the armed forces. or nearly as much as the sum which Great Britain. with all her vast Empire and sea-communi- cations to protect, spends annually in thLs direction. Of this sum, the navy will receive more than half, notwithstanding the army's preoc- cupation in Manchuria. Japan's army, navy and air force will sc- count for approximately M per cent of hcr total expenditure. This is an increase of nearly 20 per cent. over 1933-34. It is something like 30 per cent more than Great Britain de- votes to naval and military purpos- r-s, 2‘! per cent. more than the United States, 22 per cent. more than Franco. and 20 per cent. more than Ilnly. It is actually 3 per cent morn than Gcrmany alccated the year before the outbreak of thc Great War. CHARLUIYFKWWN GUARDIAN New Kipling Verse (Exchange) England's parliamentary history from the Magns Carts to modern times was the theme of a. great pageant staged at the Albert Hall in London. ‘rile outstanding scenes were the struggles of the barons a- gainst King John, the first Parlia- ment under Edward I, Elizabeth's quarrel with the Commons, the Gun- powder Plot and CromwelPs seizure of power. ‘rwo poems written by Rudyard Kipling for the production were featured. One, sung atthe con- clusion by the entire cast of 200. was: Non nobis, Domlnel Not unto us, 0 Lord The Praise and B101‘! be Of any deed or word, For in Thy judgment lies To crown or bring to nought All knowledge and device That man has reached or wrought, And we confess our blame, How all to high we hold 'I'i1st noise which men call fame That dross which men call gold. For these we undergo Our hot and godless days, But in our souls we know, Not unto us the praise, 0 Power by whom we live, Creator. judge and friend, Upholdlngly forgive Nor leave us at the end, But grant us yet to see In all our piteous ways, Non nobis, Domine. Not unto us the praise. The other poem was spoken by a. poet in the Elizabeth section of the pageant, celebrating the de- feat of the Spanish Armada: Now valor, youth, and life's delight break forth The flame of wondrous deed and thought sublime. Lightly to build new wcrlrl or lightly loose Words that shall shake and shape all after time! Giants with giants, wits with wits engage, And England, England. England takes the breath Of morning, body and soul—-till the great age Fulfills in one great chord-Eliza- beth. Arctic to be reflected in those mir- ages? In the Mediterranean Sea that is the Polar Sea. there is a vast part that is, however, only a patch in the surrounding water expanses and land masses. and it has never been navigated. It is ice-covered and becomes ice-bound. but is sometimes canallzed by channels that open and close. Ships hem- med ln the grip of that ice have to be deserted, but they are not always visited with the threatened fate of being smashed up. Some es- ‘caps. as did the Baychimo 1n the strait. Some gain their release, at least temporarily, and they are car- ried here and there before the cur- rents take them into ice-fields which open to entice them to enter and close on them with the vice that destroys and imprlsons them. The region of ice surrounding the Pole of ‘inaccessibility-which is the Pole that is, unlike the North Pole. farthest from naviga- ble waler-has succored the stray- ed or lost party, for it has provid- ed a path, though a cruel and tor- tuous path, that may be trod to safety. Does it, too. hold ice-locked ships? Are those the ships reflec- ted in the mlrages the Eskimos de- scribe? Or are they the ghost ships said to sail with phantom sil- ence. set on voyages without ports. and carried or wafted. toward. first. recovery. and then restored to the despotism of ‘the ice? SUMMER AND WINTER A shaggawed garden in the cool of Y. Faint from June heat: the last birds on the wing Nolseless: and where the yellow evening Melted to blue, the first pale stars astray. Silent, we sat. for silence seemed to say i One word: and quietly, like a hidden Sarina. Rippled the sound of garden-water- ing; Bells through the soft air sounded. far away. Dead hour of that dead evening. once again In the scent of this faded wall- flower Thou livest and I sit silent there by her. And therewith bitterly, through wind and rain That vex today this wintry Northern sea, My heart cries out, 0 living love, to thee. 4. W. Mackall. Beside feature broadcasts were n of William Peredens campaign for election in the Saskatchewan general elections. Stricken with appendicitis the Liberal candidate addressed his constituents regularly through a “rnike" at his hospital besides. After a furious struggle during, which ‘his boat was towed half mile Joe wise. 70-year old Indianl fisherman, landed a so-pound Tyee| salmon while fishing at Doddls Narrows, Nanaimo. B. C. ' car's PLANTS, We pay the postage. I Late cabbage, 40c per 100. $3.50 per 1,000. Late cauliflower, 30c per doL, 75c per 100, $5.75 per 1,000. late tomato, 30c per doz, $2.50 per 100. _ J. .1. oav a. sou, Box 187. Phone 264. 1.4577444! Charlottetown, P-E.l. JULY 5, 1934 PUBLIC. FORUM l ‘Ilsla column la opal for lb liwalllon by cnrraapollenl ef quoatfona o! intaraat. Tin Charlottetown Guardian dac- ‘ not aaouaarily ondarsa All M opinions o! oorrolnondaata- ‘ Sin-If the writer of the letter in today's Guardian is not in the rum business himself ha does not know what the ‘word “dis-simulation‘ means. We have free rum now, and everybody who is honest, and has any sense knows that Senator Hughes wants to stop that business, or at the very least improve condi- tlons. SENATOR HUGHES I am, Sir, etc, CITIZEN July 4. 1934. POTATO GROWERS Sin-A member of the Potato Growers’ Association has a. timely letter in Tuesday's Guardian. We should have all the information he asks for before the next annual meeting, but he must be a very op- timistic man who thinks Mr. Boulter will issue a report that will contain more information than the reports we have received for the last twelve or fifteen years What we want, and should insist on getting is a report from an outside capable in- dependent auditor like Mr. H. K. S. Hemmlng who would give us the facts. Nobody believes that we lost forty or fifty thousand dollars last year through frost alone, Anyhow we should get the facts before we put up any more money. At the next annual meeting the members should appoint Mr. Hem- ming auditor, adjourn the meeting For Full Strength and Fine Flavor so BRAHMIN ORANGE PEKOE TEA Ceylon Small Leaf furnace. If they failed in U115 where next could they look for a plausible ground of c9991! '0 the people? If after corralllng the dis- cordant, disloyal and soclalistlc elements of the country to their party standard, and adding 1.11858 to their stationary followers, they failed to get a show into the ""8- m-y benches, the future was surely dark and dreary‘. and 011811‘ Bun-Wt horizon the blackness of boundless space. And Canada was loyal. By an in- creased return of 123 Conservatives to 92 Liberals the Government of Sir John Macdonald was again re- turned. and the policies of his party triumphantly endorsed by a loyal people. It was the last appeal of Canada's grandest of grand old men to an enlightened electorate. Called to the GreatI Beyond he was suc- ceeded in June 1891, by Sir J. J. Abbott, Sir J. S. D. Thompson. S11‘ Mackenzie Bowel and Sir Charles Tupper. The latter met the first defeat after a. long succession of vic- tories, and was succeeded by Hon. Wilfrid Laurler (later Sir Wilfrid) whose entry into government l will refer to in my next. I am Sir, etc. POLITICAL STUDENT {i- Uaa Minardh for Stiff Jnlnln to give him time to prepare the report, then hold another meeting. and take the whole day to hear the: report, ask Mr. Hemming questions and get his explanations. We should not go on in the dark any longer. I am. Sir, etc. ANOTHER. MEMBER. ‘ POLITICAL HISTORY N0. 4 Sin-It was in 1891 that Liberal policy making gave its death kick. All former conlrlvances of policy were consigned to gerdillon by thc elzzctrlratc, and now one grand ef- fort. fhe most revolutionary in th: history of North American convul- sions, was resorted lo in the vain hope that there were enough oi anti-British in Canada to take the bait and hand them the reins of government. This brand policy, launched as the craft to to carry the Liberal party into Dower. and the country into part- mercial Union" with the States. the Republic was too evident escape detection. Erastus ity in the States, was sent through Canada on a. missionary lecture tour to draw our jieoplc into the net. President Taft was pictured in the background as the "power be- hind" manipulating the machine, and we remember that famous cartoon of the dog at the pheno- graph listening to “His Master's Voice" with Taft at the speaking end. It was an open appeal to those many factions of discontent which always can be found in every courlfry. It was a challenge to Brit- ish connection. and too evident in appearance as tllc thin cdge of the wedge towards ultimate annexation with the United Siates. It was the catch vow designed to capture the to the Mother Land. To the seek- ers after money gain it had its lure. To many interests of commerce there was the prospect of trading combinations and pocket linings of speculative value to their selfish ambitions. regardless of the disaster to the masses. And lhere was the justification to the American spcc- ulator to fill ihc Liberal campaign funds with silver dollar notcs and golden eagles. This election was a remarkable test of the loyalty of our people to the British crown. It was this that brought forth that immoral utterance of Sir John A. Macdonald. a passage which can never be ef- faced from hlstoryz-"A British subject I ivas born; a British gub- ject I will die." And in this cam- paign there arosc that fearful pre- judice of Liberal second rate heel- ers against the Flag. in which from time to time we so often road their declarations of ‘fear that "m!!! Wflviflfl" may again visit them with punishment for their political heresies. 1t was a bitterly fought campaign. The last dcsgerlite hope of Liberal policy making was in the testing The 2 Macs Extra. Special Prices in a- Weok-End Sale of Toiletries, Palcntmetc. Telephone 315 is unable u; come to Store. 350 lube West's Tooth Pasta . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22c 3 label Squibb: Tooth Paste . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 50c 50c Jar Ponds Creams .. 43c 80o Danderine . . . . . .. . .. 54c 2 Tooth Brushes 29c Ilcurjols Evening in Paris Face Powder, Lipstick and Perfume, all for $1.10 81.00 Bottle Nujol . . .. 59c $1.00 Bottle Enos 5311s.. 89c $1.00 Bottle Abbeys Salts 79c 50c Frultatives . . . . . . . . . 13c $1.25 Ironlzcd Yeast 98c 118W‘ nershlp with the United States.‘ was ‘ put into the election mart as. “Com- , Collusion with wire-pullers ‘irolii; to] Wimali. then the leading financial author-_ votes of every e‘ement of disloyalty. BEGIN well by The Quintuplets In 30 Years (New York Times) Quebec, June 26. Millie-Today; weight records show a net loss of seven and a half pounds. M“, Emilie Lajus. 0f this 01W. 194 1-1 last week, tips the scales today at 182. From Cochrane Ont. comes word that her sister, Mrs. Annfitk Bruer. has lost seven pounds, now weighing 193. Two other sisters, Mrs. Marie Poder and Mrs. Cecile Bradford, of North Bay. have each gained one pound. being now 17g and 183 pounds respectively, Th, fifth and only unmarried sister, Miss Yvonne Dionne, of col-beg, shows no change from her weight of 119 pounds. Next to wool, wheat is the creates‘ of Alustznllak prilnary industries. A peculiar form of irrigation l; practised in some parts of northern Slnd in India where iihe sol is retentive. It is known as "bosi". The oosl lands are heavily flooded up to a iwt or so in depth when water is available in the not weather. Th, land is well cultivated as soon as thd bullocks can walk on .t and good crops a-re obtained. feeding fox pups p Imperial Puppy Food. CONTINUE during early months, later with Imperial Fox Biscuits and so SUCCEED in raising highest-class foxes, acknowledged lead- ers in live stock and pelt Box 446. values. Manufacturers: imperial Biscuit Co., Ltd. Phone 721. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I. i heaters, and are of two types: (l) “Hot Shot." "Major." "Vulco." trlral Inspector. To the sellers of unapproved Inspection Art 1932: 4. Government Laboratory, and has been approved!’ Act I932. application to this Department. L-6525-7-3-3l PROVINCE CF PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND ELECTRICAL INSPECTION DEPARTMENT WARNING T() THE GENERAL PUBLIC Y It has come to our attention that several unapproved and sull- standard types of electrical appliances and equipment are being offered for sale in this Province, contrary to the Law. At resent extremely dangerous types of Electric Water Heaters an being sold. These are included in the following list of unflaproved Faucet W150. with portable cord. manufactured under the fol- lowing names: "Tom Thumb Senior," "Tom Thumb Junior," "Alladln," (2) Immersion type, with portable cord, mnnufaclured under the following names: “Lux-Vlsel" 0r “Magic Disc," “Mystosol? "Alladln." “Wonder? "Jiffy," “Besteverfl “Kwlkfl "Comer." "Hot Donut.” Persons having purchased any of these types of heaters are requested to advise the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, or the Provincial Elec- appllances and equipment we draw attention to Rule 4 of the Rules and Regulations of The Electrical “All electrical equipment used in electrical installations or of- fered for sale in this Province shall be "approved" within the mcanin! of the Code, it being understood that such word "approved" means that such equipment has been submltled for examination and test to tllo ; Laboratories; of the IIydro-Electric Power Commission of Ontario or lo the Underwriters‘ Laboratories of Chicago, or tn a recognized Canadian been approved as suitable for sale and use. Notwithstanding such approval any electrical equipment mo? be rejected at any time by an Inspector if in his oplrfcn such equipment is below standard, m- not used for the specific purpose fnl‘ which if- hi" For refusing or neglecting to comply with the provisions of this Rulr the offenders are liable to prosecution under The Electrical Imlpectlon . Information regarding approved appliances will be furnished upon v E. S. CHANDLER. Provincial Electrical Inspector. —Bailcling Materials- -— Just Received — One carload of the famous C. Lloyd & Sons Inside and Outside Panel Doors All sizes. One carload of Rhynas 8: Son Ltd, Window Frames and Glazed Sashes. One carload Douglas Fir Mouldings Spouting and Finish Direct from Vancouver. One carload Johns Manville Ltd, Asbestos Shingles and Roofings Direct from Factory. Prices on Application. L. M. POOLE & CO. PAOLPS WIIARVIZS -_ -_